Login
Register
Reset Password
Publish & Distribute
Publishing Solutions
Distribution Solutions
Subjects
Architecture and Design
Arts
Business and Economics
Chemistry
Classical and Ancient Near Eastern Studies
Computer Sciences
Cultural Studies
Engineering
General Interest
Geosciences
History
Industrial Chemistry
Jewish Studies
Law
Library and Information Science, Book Studies
Life Sciences
Linguistics and Semiotics
Literary Studies
Materials Sciences
Mathematics
Medicine
Music
Pharmacy
Philosophy
Physics
Social Sciences
Sports and Recreation
Theology and Religion
Publications
Journals
Books
Proceedings
Publishers
Blog
Contact
Search
EUR
USD
GBP
English
English
Deutsch
Polski
Español
Français
Italiano
Cart
Home
Journals
American, British and Canadian Studies
Volume 35 (2020): Issue 1 (December 2020)
Open Access
The Destruction of Nationalism in Twenty-First Century Canadian Apocalyptic Fiction
Matthew Cormier
Matthew Cormier
| Mar 01, 2021
American, British and Canadian Studies
Volume 35 (2020): Issue 1 (December 2020)
About this article
Previous Article
Next Article
Abstract
References
Authors
Articles in this Issue
Preview
PDF
Cite
Share
Published Online:
Mar 01, 2021
Page range:
5 - 22
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2478/abcsj-2020-0014
Keywords
apocalyptic genre
,
English-Canadian fiction
,
Québécois fiction
,
Indigenous fiction
,
nationalism
,
globalization
,
Emily St. John Mandel
,
Thomas King
,
Nicolas Dickner
© 2020 Matthew Cormier, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Matthew Cormier
University of Alberta,
Canada